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<channel>
	<title>Belly Tales &#187; Homebirth</title>
	<atom:link href="http://www.bellytales.com/category/homebirth/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://www.bellytales.com</link>
	<description>The Diary of a Midwife</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Tue, 10 Jan 2012 00:49:41 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language>en</language>
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		<item>
		<title>Ina May in the Sun</title>
		<link>http://www.bellytales.com/2012/01/06/ina-may-in-the-sun/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bellytales.com/2012/01/06/ina-may-in-the-sun/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 06 Jan 2012 20:50:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>The Midwife</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Homebirth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Labor and Birth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Midwifery]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vaginal Birth]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bellytales.com/?p=433</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Sun Magazine has a fantastic article in their current issue (Jan. 2012) interviewing Ina May, who&#8217;s recently come out with a new book Birth Matters: A Midwife&#8217;s Manifesta, about the medicalization of birth.   While the online version of the article is truncated, it&#8217;s still a fascinating read, complete with the history of how and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.thesunmagazine.org/">The Sun Magazine</a> has a fantastic article in their current issue (Jan. 2012) <a href="http://www.thesunmagazine.org/issues/433/oh_baby">interviewing Ina May</a>, who&#8217;s recently come out with a new book <a href="\http://www.amazon.com/Birth-Matters-Ina-May-Gaskin/dp/1583229272/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1325882697&amp;sr=1-1">Birth Matters: A Midwife&#8217;s Manifesta</a>, about the medicalization of birth.   While the online version of the article is truncated, it&#8217;s still a fascinating read, complete with the history of how and why vaginal breech births fell out of practice (as dictated by insurance companies, no less!  I had no idea!).  Nothing earth shattering, but Ina May is always concise and insightful, and always, always a good read.  <a href="http://www.thesunmagazine.org/issues/433/oh_baby">Enjoy!</a></p>
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		<item>
		<title>Wax Study Revisited</title>
		<link>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/10/09/wax-study-revisited/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/10/09/wax-study-revisited/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Oct 2011 00:31:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>The Midwife</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Choice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Complications]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Homebirth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hospitals]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Labor and Birth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Midwifery]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Research]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bellytales.com/?p=362</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Imagine the following scenario:  a meta-analysis comparing planned homebirths to planned hospital births is published, but it has so many statistical flaws in it that the journal which originally published it goes on to print several letters to the Editor critiquing the flawed research, in order to give the authors a second chance to explain [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Imagine the following scenario:  a <a href="http://www.ajog.org/article/S0002-9378(10)00671-X/abstract">meta-analysis comparing planned homebirths to planned hospital births</a> is published, but it has so many statistical flaws in it that the journal which originally published it goes on to print <a href="http://www.ajog.org/article/S0002-9378(11)00080-9/fulltext">several letters to the Editor critiquing the flawed research</a>, in order to give the authors a second chance to explain themselves.  This flawed meta-analysis is then <a href="http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/739987">roundly criticized by several authors of many of the individual studies used in the meta-analysis</a>, pointing out the ways that the meta-analysis&#8217; findings were based on a faulty a computational tool, numerical errors, mistakes in inclusion/ exclusion criteria and methodological and reporting errors.  Nevertheless, despite the widely discussed flaws in this said meta-analysis, the trade organization for all obstetricians and gynecologists in this country still goes ahead and <a href="http://www.acog.org/from_home/publications/press_releases/nr01-20-11.cfm">bases their most recent opinion statement</a> on this very same flawed study.  Sounds improbable, right?  Wrong!</p>
<p>This meta-analysis (<a href="www.ajog.org/article/S0002-9378(10)00671-X/abstract">Maternal and newborn outcomes in planned home birth v. planned hospital birth: a metaanalysis</a>) by Wax et. al. (also known simply as the &#8216;Wax study&#8221;) is not new.  It came out last September in the <em>American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology (AJOG)</em>, but the reverberations of this controversial study are still being felt in the birthing community today.  As mentioned above, the flaws in this study have been discussed on numerous blogs and in numerous articles, so there&#8217;s no need to re-hash the entire argument here. (For further reading on this, though, check out the following links:<a href="http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/739987"> </a><a href="http://www.scienceandsensibility.org/?p=1422">Science and Sensibility</a>, <a href="http://www.ourbodiesourblog.org/blog/2010/07/much-ado-about-a-meta-analysis-on-home-vs-hospital-birth  ">Our Bodies Our Blog</a>, <a href="http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/index.php/home-birth-safety/">Science Based Medicine</a>, <a href=" http://www.nature.com/news/2011/110318/full/news.2011.162.html">Nature</a>, <a href="http://www.midwife.org/documents/ACNMStatementonAJOGPublicationonHomeBirth_07132010.pdf">ACNM&#8217;s response</a>, <a href="http://www.midwiferytoday.com/articles/ajog_response.asp">Midwifery Today&#8217;s response</a>).  To sum it all up, though, I quote from Michal et. al., <a href="http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/739987">Planned Homebirth v. Hospital Birth: A Meta-analysis Gone Wrong</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>The statistical analysis upon which [the Wax meta-analysis'] conclusion was based was deeply flawed, containing many numerical errors, improper inclusion and exclusion of studies, mischaracterization of cited works, and logical impossibilities. In addition, the software tool used for nearly two thirds of the meta-analysis calculations contains serious errors that can dramatically underestimate confidence intervals (CIs), and this resulted in at least 1 spuriously statistically significant result. Despite the publication of statements and commentaries querying the reliability of the findings, this faulty study now forms the evidentiary basis for an American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Committee Opinion, meaning that its results are being presented to expectant parents as the state-of-the-art in home birth safety research.</p></blockquote>
<p>And that&#8217;s really the crux of the issue right there: ACOG has based their most recent home birth committee opinion paper on the Wax findings, despite the fact that the Wax study is so controversial, and has been so loudly contested.  ACOG seems to take the Wax study as gospel truth: &#8220;Published medical evidence shows [home birth] does carry a two- to three-fold increase in the risk of newborn death compared with planned hospital births.&#8221; (i.e. the Wax findings).  But as you can see above, the Wax findings are anything but conclusive. Couple this with the fact that a recent study in the current issue of <em>Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology (</em>ACOG&#8217;s very own publication, aka the Green Journal) found that<strong><a href="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21826038"> two-thirds of all of ACOG&#8217;s practice guidelines have no basis in science</a></strong>, and we have a very serious cause for alarm.  As one of the <a href="http://www.ajog.org/article/S0002-9378(11)00075-5/fulltext">letters to the Editor</a> at AJOG pointed out in regards to the Wax Study,  this is the dangerous practice of communicating bad science to the public.  To quote liberally from this letter to the Editor:</p>
<blockquote><p>These practices are unethical, causing harm through unfounded confusion and fear, and misleading policymakers and the public. The Singapore statement on research integrity represents the first international effort to unify policies, guidelines, and codes of conduct for researchers worldwide.<sup>4</sup>   Accordingly, the AJOG publication would fail on 2 counts: (1) poor quality of the study; and (2) author recommendations made beyond what the data support and outside of their professional expertise. Obstetricians are not the leading professional group in home birth and midwifery-led care, and should not reach policy conclusions in isolation. It is essential to use appropriate subject peer reviewers: in this case midwife and epidemiology experts in studies examining midwifery care and birth setting.</p></blockquote>
<p>Obstetricians have never been the experts on home birth.  In my own personal experience, I cannot think of a single obstetrician who has even <em>seen</em> a home birth.  Nevertheless, as Melissa Cheyney writes in the  Huffington Post (<a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/melissa-cheyney/post_812_b_709215.html">Why Home Births Are Worth Considering</a>), the Wax study is only serving to fan the flames between the obstetrical/ medical community and the home birth community (I purposely refrain from saying the homebirth/ <em>midwifery</em> community, because I feel like midwives can and do and SHOULD straddle the gap between the home birth community and medicine, offering high-touch, low-tech intervention as we do, and advocating for all women, everywhere, regardless of their birth choices or location of birth).  When home birth is seen as more dangerous than hospital birth by obstetrical &#8220;experts&#8221;, what then happens to the women and families who still choose to have a home birth?  Are they considered crackpots and lunatics endangering the lives of their babies?  What happens if they need to transfer to a hospital?  What happens if they need to transfer to a hospital but the midwife is reluctant to make the transfer based on the stigma and ostracizing treatment she and the family will receive in the hospital setting?  Will the barriers to midwives choosing to attend home births continue to rise so high that ultimately they can no longer provide this service? And if that happens, where does that leave the women who will still choose to have a home birth anyway, without any medical provider available to attend them?</p>
<p>So long as ACOG&#8217;s <em>opinion</em> on home birth continues to be based on poor science, we&#8217;ll continue to move further and further away from what this country truly needs: an <em>integrated </em>model of care, where women who choose home births and the midwives who serve those women are backed up by obstetricians and the medical model of care, allowing for safe transfers when needed without stigma, judgement or blame.</p>
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		<title>One World Birth about to launch!</title>
		<link>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/08/30/one-world-birth-about-to-launch/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/08/30/one-world-birth-about-to-launch/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Aug 2011 17:29:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>The Midwife</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Birth Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cesarean Birth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Homebirth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hospitals]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Labor and Birth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Labor Support]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Midwifery]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vaginal Birth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[VBAC]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bellytales.com/?p=401</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Just stumbled upon this via a friend on Facebook, and watching the welcome video just sent chills down my spine.  Two passionate filmmakers are creating an interactive, continuously-updated online TV channel focusing on nothing but birth, and the state of birth in our world right now, by interviewing the world&#8217;s leading experts in birth and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Just stumbled upon this via a friend on Facebook, and watching the welcome video just sent chills down my spine.  Two passionate filmmakers are creating an interactive, continuously-updated online TV channel focusing on nothing but birth, and the state of birth in our world right now, by interviewing the world&#8217;s leading experts in birth and attempting to fuse birth, birth education and film-making.  Their mission is to empower women to believe that they CAN give birth, fully informed of their choices.  Now that&#8217;s a mission I can get behind!  <a href="http://www.oneworldbirth.net/">Oneworldbirth.net</a> will launch on September 1st; until then, you can watch the website trailer below:</p>
<p><object width="425" height="355" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" data="http://www.youtube.com/v/8w9WNtTAVYU"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/8w9WNtTAVYU" />This video was embedded using the YouTuber plugin by <a href="http://www.roytanck.com">Roy Tanck</a>. Adobe Flash Player is required to view the video.</object></p>
<p>My one hope is that they don&#8217;t just focus on birth in the developed world (although, granted, we&#8217;re desperately in need of a birth revolution here in the developed world), but also tackle some of the ongoing issues in the developing world, too.  I can&#8217;t wait to see what comes next out of this! Viva la revolucion!</p>
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		<item>
		<title>More Business of Being Born</title>
		<link>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/08/24/more-business-of-being-born/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/08/24/more-business-of-being-born/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Aug 2011 21:52:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>The Midwife</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Birth Centers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Homebirth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hospitals]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Labor and Birth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Midwifery]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bellytales.com/?p=396</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Back in 2007, I was lucky enough to attend an advance screening of The Business of Being Born in New York City, and I wrote this review of it at the time.  Since then, it&#8217;s become widely popular and widely viewed, loudly praised and criticized by opposing sides of the birth debate, and has served as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Back in 2007, I was lucky enough to attend an advance screening of <em>The Business of Being Born</em> in New York City, and I wrote <a href="http://www.bellytales.com/2007/05/08/the-business-of-being-born/">this review</a> of it at the time.  Since then, it&#8217;s become widely popular and widely viewed, loudly praised and criticized by opposing sides of the birth debate, and has served as the starting point for thousands of people as they begin to educate themselves about birth and navigate the obstetrical mine-field in this country.  It&#8217;s amazing to me how much of a cultural icon this film has become since it&#8217;s release&#8212;so much so that ACOG alluded to it in its <a href="http://www.bellytales.com/2008/02/11/acogs-statement-on-homebirths/">Statement on Homebirth</a> back in 2008 (&#8220;Childbirth decisions should not be dictated or influenced by what’s fashionable, trendy, or the latest cause célèbre.&#8221;)&#8212;and how this film has served as a lightning rod (re-)sparking endless debate, and bringing awareness to a much larger and more mainstream audience.</p>
<p>However, both Ricki Lake and Abby Epstein admitted that there were several more pieces of the puzzle which they couldn&#8217;t delve into due to time constraints in their film, and how they really wished they could.  Now, fast-forward to 2011 and it seems like they&#8217;re making good on their promise to continue to explore various aspects of childbirth in America with the upcoming release of a 4 part documentary series which continues where <em>The Business of Being Born </em>left off, entitled (pragmatically): <em><a href="http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/211982196/more-business-of-being-born-ricki-lake-and-abby-ep">More Business of Being Born.</a>  </em>I, for one, cannot wait to see these films and see the debate continue!!</p>
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		<title>Sebastian&#8217;s Birth Story</title>
		<link>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/06/07/sebastians-birth-story/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/06/07/sebastians-birth-story/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Jun 2011 18:23:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>The Midwife</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Birth Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Homebirth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Labor and Birth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vaginal Birth]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bellytales.com/?p=386</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Awhile ago, during the pregnancy, I joined an online forum with other women who were also pregnant and due in May, and this group of women became my &#8220;due date club.&#8221;  About halfway through our pregnancies, we decided to do a bead swap, where most of the women of the group decided to send each [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Awhile ago, during the pregnancy, I joined an online forum with other women who were also pregnant and due in May, and this group of women became my &#8220;due date club.&#8221;  About halfway through our pregnancies, we decided to do a bead swap, where most of the women of the group decided to send each other a bead, often with a wish/ blessing/ quote attached to it, and we were then able to make necklaces out of all of the beads we had received from the other women.  I must admit, my necklace was a huge source of strength and comfort for me!  While I was in labor I wore the necklace the entire time, and clutched it in my fist while I was pushing.  Thinking about the other women who were also in labor at the same time, or who had just had babies/ or were just about to have babies was a really helpful thought for me during the thick of it.  And now that nearly all of us have given birth at this point, this group of women is also proving to be an invaluable source of support through the tricky new parenting/ postpartum days.</p>
<p>One of the women from this group was also willing to share her birth story here on Belly Tales, so with her permission I am going to post it. Her name is Katie, and she gave birth to a beautiful son, Sebastian, at home in a birthtub.  This is their birth story, written by Katie:</p>
<p>_______________________________________________________________________________________________________</p>
<p>I had a lot of nervousness going into my third birth. Mostly I was nervous about the length of labor, tearing, shoulder dystocia and some other things. My second birth was my first home birth, and it was great; however, there were a few complications, all of which were handled marvelously by my midwives. At a blessingway that my friends threw for me, I was asked to tell about my ideal birth, so I did. I was nervous to say things like” it was short,” or “I didn’t tear.” I did, though, and I just hoped it would turn out that way.</p>
<p>Both of my boys were born after their due dates, so I was sure I had 40 weeks before I would have my baby. I worked hard to get all of my writing done so that I could relax for a week before the baby came.</p>
<p>On Monday morning, May 9, when my husband Michael’s alarm clock went off, I told him I’d been having some regular contractions for a bit, and since I’d been having contractions on and off for a couple of weeks now, he reminded me that they were probably just Braxton Hicks warm-up contractions. I agreed. After a while, I got up and went to the bathroom. I noticed, though, that I had lost my mucus plus, so I knew that these contractions were different.</p>
<p>I kept about with my morning plans, though. I went to eat breakfast with a friend, and on the way, I called my midwife to let her know that I thought maybe I was in early labor. After breakfast, I was going to go to the YMCA to walk to the track and help move things along, but since my midwife was in the area, she decided to come over and see how things were progressing. She checked me around 11 a.m. and said that I was almost four centimeters dilated. I was shocked. My contractions were about four minutes apart, and they weren’t even that painful. She told me to try to take a nap that afternoon. She also told me that she had another mom in labor, which made my heart sink. That mom was also about four centimeters dilated as well.</p>
<p>After she left, I decided to take Atticus to lunch on his way to preschool. He enjoyed that, and when I dropped him off, I told his classroom assistant that I would likely have the baby later tonight, as I was four centimeters. She looked at me in complete shock, like, “Why are you driving and walking around right now?” It cracked me up.</p>
<p>When I got home, I did lie down, and I tried to sleep, but my excitement was too overwhelming. I knew I needed to conserve energy at that point, so I just grabbed my laptop and watched some TV shows on Hulu to keep me distracted. I watched the most recent episodes of “The Office,” “30 Rock” and “Parks and Recreation,” in that order. By the time I got to the last TV show, I had to pause the show during a contraction, get on all fours and rock through the contraction. It was becoming more intense. Atticus came home from school, and he watched me labor for a bit. He asked a lot of questions.</p>
<p>I called my midwife and told her she needed to come again. She got there around 5 p.m., and checked me again. I was only at a 4 ½! I was sure I was further along as the contractions at this point felt more intense. I was discouraged and thought that I was in for a repeat of August’s slow labor. Plus, her other mom in labor was at six centimeters, and I felt so nervous that I wouldn’t get to have my midwife at my birth.</p>
<p>My midwife’s assistant arrived around 5:30 or 6, and she and Robyn, my midwife, went outside to discuss what they would do. When they came back, she said that she was going to stay with me and send her assistant to the other mom. She also called my friend and midwife, Mary, to stay with us and be with me when and if Robyn needed to go to the other mom.</p>
<p>During this time, Michael started filling the birth pool, so when that was done I got in it. The water was definitely not hot enough for me, so he started boiling pans on the stove to fill it with hotter water.</p>
<p>During this time, my contractions stayed three to four minutes apart, but I needed a lot of help getting through them. I had to hold someone’s hand through each one. I would either blow my lips out like a horse through the entire contraction, chant things like, “I am strong,” “I am bigger than this” or “it’s ok” over and over again. I tried some of the same visualizations I used for August’s birth, but they didn’t work for this one, so I made new ones. I also told myself that I could do anything for a minute. I stayed in the pool for a couple of hours, just working through the contractions like this and thinking I had a very long way to go.</p>
<p>At one point, my midwife told me that she thought I was a lot further on. So, when Mary arrived around 8:30ish, she wanted to check me again, because she thought the baby would be born very soon. I was shocked to hear that. When Mary arrived, she checked me, and I was dilated to an 8 or 9 with a bulging bag of water. I could not believe it. I was sure I was going to be laboring all night. How in the world could I be that far along? I felt like even though my contractions were very painful, they weren’t even that close together yet.</p>
<p>We decided to break my water, and as soon as that happened, I felt tons of pressure, and knew that it was very close. My midwife helped stretch my cervix through two or three contractions, which, of course, was painful, but I knew it meant the end. That was about 8:45. Atticus and my mom joined the rest of us in the bedroom. I liked that Atticus was there. He just stood next to Michael and watched everything.</p>
<p>I couldn’t believe how quickly I felt the need to push. He was right there, and I could tell. During my next contraction, I started pushing his head out, and it really hurt. I kept saying that it hurt. I said I couldn’t push anymore. So, the midwives said it was ok to just breathe and pant a bit, which I did. It still hurt, but at that point, that felt better than pushing. I still could feel him moving down, though.</p>
<p>It was intense, and at one point, I saw Atticus run away, and that made me sad, but I knew it was probably best at that point. While he was crowing, the midwives remarked on his black hair, so I put my hand down and felt it. I could not believe that that was my baby’s head and that I would meet him soon. That made me want to push harder.</p>
<p>Throughout my pregnancy, I had expressed to my midwife how I didn’t want to tear as much as I did last time. While I was pushing, she was using oils to help me stretch and putting a lot of pressure on my perineum. While it was happening, though, I was sure I was tearing, because it was so intense and painful.</p>
<p>After his head was out, the midwife checked for cord, and then I start pushing the rest out. It felt like it took a while to come out, but now, when I look at the pictures, I see that it was less than a minute. As soon as he was out, I grabbed and just loved on him. I was so relieved it was over, but I was also so happy to be holding him. And I just couldn’t stop staring at his hair! There was so much of it! He also looked so small, as August was almost nine pounds, and this baby looked teeny-tiny compared to that. I kept hugging him, and the other people in the room reminded me to check to see is he was a boy or girl.</p>
<p>I knew he was a boy as soon as I saw him, and my suspicions were confirmed as soon as I looked. I had wanted a girl, admittedly, but when I saw him, I didn’t care one bit that he was a boy, and I thought about how great it would be to have three little boys, and how cute they all would be together.</p>
<p>I got to stay in the tub for a few minutes. I was still crampy, and I tried to push the placenta out, but it wasn’t coming yet, so I decided to get out of the pool. I didn’t want to cut the cord yet, so Michael helped me stand up, and my midwife held the baby close to me so that he could stay attached for a bit longer.</p>
<p>I tried to nurse him to help the placenta detach, but he was so quiet and just not really interested. I gave a few good pushes, though, and it finally came out. After some inspection, my midwife said she didn’t think that I would need stitches. I was in complete and utter shock. I was also thrilled.</p>
<p>My midwife had been in contact with her assistant who was with the other laboring mom, so she had to leave to be with her, which was fine with me. I was just so thrilled that she had been able to be at my birth. After she left, Mary helped me get cleaned up and settled in bed.</p>
<p>The next day we named our boy Sebastian Michael. He weighed 8 lbs, one ounce and was 20 ¼ inches long.</p>
<p>I still can’t believe that everything I wanted for my birth came true: no tearing, no shoulder dystocia/easy passage and relatively short(er) labor. I feel quiet lucky.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>Homebirth in the Washington Post</title>
		<link>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/06/06/homebirth-in-the-washington-post/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/06/06/homebirth-in-the-washington-post/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Jun 2011 18:43:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>The Midwife</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Homebirth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Labor and Birth]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bellytales.com/?p=381</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Just a quick link to a recent article in the Washington Post about why a journalist there chose to have a planned homebirth.  I think she does a good job of articulating the many benefits associated with homebirth for low-risk women, but she also emphasized that this choice is not right for everyone (obviously).  Nice [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Just a quick link to a recent article in the Washington Post about why a journalist there chose to have a planned homebirth.  I think she does a good job of articulating the many benefits associated with homebirth for low-risk women, but she also emphasized that this choice is not right for everyone (obviously).  Nice to see homebirth getting some major press, though!  The article can be found<a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/why-i-chose-a-home-birth/2011/05/30/AGsFyPIH_story.html"> HERE!</a></p>
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		<title>My Birth Story</title>
		<link>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/05/27/my-birth-story/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/05/27/my-birth-story/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 28 May 2011 00:20:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>The Midwife</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Birth Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Good Enough to Share]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Homebirth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Labor and Birth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vaginal Birth]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bellytales.com/?p=376</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It&#8217;s funny to be writing this.  I have heard and listened to so many women share their birth stories with me, posted birth stories here on my blog, attended births and helped women write their birth stories, but now I come to a first for me: the writing of my own birth story.  I think [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>
<p>It&#8217;s funny to be writing this.  I have heard and listened to so many women share their birth stories with me, posted birth stories here on my blog, attended births and helped women write their birth stories, but now I come to a first for me: the writing of my own birth story.  I think there&#8217;s something really important about writing your birth story down, for so many reasons.  First, it helps you process something which is almost too big to process, too mysterious and transformational and ephemeral; writing it down helps capture it in a way that can be recalled.  It turns it into a story, something which can be retold and remembered, something which can be shared with others, something which can take on mythic qualities the more you share it.  It can offer guidance or inspiration (if it&#8217;s a positive story) or confirm fears and doubts (if it&#8217;s a negative story); it becomes part of the framework that women use to understand birth, and I believe that the sharing and retelling of these stories if vital for women, and a very important part of the postpartum healing process.</p>
<p>So, without further adieu&#8230;</p>
<p>Labor for me started on Saturday May 14th.  I was 39 weeks and 2 days pregnant, and was very ready to give birth.  I had stopped working at 38 weeks, and had spent the last week finishing up the few small things on my to-do list, but mostly I spent it resting and reading my novel, getting a last pre-birth pedicure, catching up with friends, and waiting, waiting, waiting.  Wondering when it was going to start, when I would go into labor, what labor would be like, how long or short or awful or ecstatic it would be&#8230;</p>
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<p>It was the contractions that woke me up around 4 am on Saturday morning.  They were like really strong menstrual cramps, too painful to sleep through, although I tried to sleep in between them (but also I was really excited that things were starting, so I didn&#8217;t sleep much).  Around 9 am I woke my husband up and we started to time them a bit: they were still irregular, every 8-10 min, and stayed that way through most of the day.  At points they even spaced out and almost went away completely. I went to brunch with some of my colleagues from work around 1 pm, and during the whole of brunch my contractions disappeared completely. After brunch we got some ice cream and walked around a bit, and the walking brought them back again. Feeling like something was finally happening, we picked up some last minute baby stuff (diapers!) and headed home.  The contractions continued through the afternoon, strong enough to make napping difficult, and then I lost my mucus plug around 6 pm that night, which I took as a really good sign, and we ordered some pizza for dinner and tried to watch a movie while I rocked on the birthing ball.  The contractions continued to pick up pace, and about halfway through the movie I told my husband I couldn&#8217;t concentrate on the movie any more.  We turned the movie off, and called our doula.  At this point, the contractions were about every 4-5 min, and were starting to take up all of my attention, which again we thought was a good sign.</p>
<p>Our wonderful doula came over around midnight Sat. night, and we bounced on the ball for awhile, and then walked and swayed with the contractions, while they continued very strong and intense every 4-5 min.  I thought this was active labor, and believe me, they really were strong and painful contractions!  We called our midwife, and she came over around two am on Sunday morning. (Just a quick word about our midwives: we had two midwives who would be attending our birth.  The first midwife to show up was the one who was actually on-call that weekend).  We also called my best friend, who lives 10 blocks away and was going to act as an assistant/ extra pair of hands throughout the birth (her main role was to keep my husband hydrated, and to take pictures).  I would blow or moan throw the contractions, and my husband and our doula did a great job of keeping me hydrated and eating small snacks now and then, and getting me up to the bathroom to pee every hour or so.  At some point, I got into the birth tub and labored there for several hours.  I felt nauseous and thought I needed to vomit, which got us very excited because we thought we were hitting transition.  How wrong we were!!</p>
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<p>As the light came up on Sunday morning I was about 26 hours into labor (counting from 4 am on Saturday, which is when the contractions had first begun), and I was getting incredibly exhausted.  Our midwife finally checked me around 6 am to see where I was at, and it turned out I was only 4 cm dilated!!  And not a loose and stretchy 4 cm, a tight and unstretchy 4 cm, and only about 80% effaced!  I can&#8217;t even begin to describe my disappointment at this point.  I had thought I had been going through strong active labor, and here I was still in early labor, more or less, after all of that hard work!   Our midwife gave us a pep talk: the longest part of labor is the latent phase, I was now 4 cm which is pretty much the end of latent phase and a great place to start from, the baby&#8217;s heart had always sounded perfect every time we had listened to him, so he was holding up well, and everything was still looking good.  We decided to re-set and take a rest.  I was truly exhausted, and knowing where I was in the labor was helpful, at least, because it gave me perspective.  Our midwife went home to get a nap, our doula and friend fell asleep on our couch, and my husband and I went to bed.  Every time I had a contraction I just kept telling myself it was nothing, no big deal, and to relax, thinking that if I was only 4 cm dilated, these contractions weren&#8217;t the real deal, and shouldn&#8217;t take up so much of my attention.  With this mindset I was able to sleep for about 2 hours, and the contractions mercifully spaced out quite a bit.</p>
<p>I woke up around 9:30 am on Sunday morning and headed upstairs again. Our doula woke up and cooked some breakfast for us (mmm, pancakes&#8211;although I was only able to eat a few bites), and we began our second day of labor.  It was a strange mix of hope and fear.  I was hopeful because I had made it to 4 cm, which meant that something was happening, and that every contraction after that was hopefully dilating me further.  But I was also doubtful and full of fear, unsure if things were actually progressing or not.  My midwife brain was still very active, thinking about possible scenarios and what-if situations: what if I didn&#8217;t dilate any further? What if I was too exhausted to go on? What if I was the same at the next exam? Then what?  I read aloud a long list of birth affirmations which I had written during the pregnancy, and we listened to some powerful Goddess chants while I labored on the ball, and eventually we took a walk around the block, just to get some fresh air.  Our midwife had left the birth set-up at our house, and since our doula was also a Labour &amp; Delivery RN, we periodically checked the fetal heart beat throughout the day with the doppler, and his heart continued to chug along nice and steady, 120s-130s, which was very reassuring.  At least he was doing well, even if his mama was languishing!  The contractions continued pretty regularly every 4-5 minutes throughout most of the day, but by late afternoon they had begun to peter out again, and I was beyond exhausted at this point. I had more or less decided in my mind that the next step was going to be heading in to the hospital for an epidural and pitocin, because I was truly beginning to feel like I couldn&#8217;t take it any more.</p>
<p>The first on-call midwife came back over late Sunday afternoon around 4 pm and at that point I was very business-like.  I wanted an exam, and I wanted to know what the next step was.  She checked me and, much to my despair, I was only 4-5 cm dilated, although now it was a very stretchy and loose 4-5 cm, and She was able to manually stretch and dilate my cervix to 6 cm (which was EXCRUCIATING), and I&#8217;m not even sure if it stayed that way because his head wasn&#8217;t well-applied to the cervix at that point.  We talked through our options once again. I mentioned the epidural and pitocin idea, but everyone else felt this was premature. It was a moment where my birth team had more faith in my power to birth than I did, and I am so grateful to them for their strength and perseverance, because I was losing faith in myself!  Our midwife suggested trying some nipple stimulation instead of pitocin.  So once again we re-set, and tried to change the energy in the room.  We put on a mix of some of my favorite hip-hop and rap songs with a strong and powerful beat, and I began to move more vigorously, doing squats and lunges during the contractions.  In between contractions we stimulated my nipples with a breast pump while I rocked my hips back and forth in time to the music.</p>
<p>After another few hours of this, I was once again exhausted and losing faith and the contractions, despite the nipple stimulation, were petering out once more.  At this point the second midwife came over and we had a very long heart-to-heart conversation about all of our options. I was about ready to throw in the towel; I was practically convinced that going to the hospital was the only way out of this situation. Instead, the second midwife went through all of the positives with me: the baby&#8217;s heart was strong and he was doing well, so there was no concern about fetal distress, my membranes were still intact so there was no risk of infection, and slow labors are still normal labors.  We also talked about my fears at this point.  My biggest fear was simply that I couldn&#8217;t do it; that giving birth vaginally, at home, no less, was beyond me.  I was scared that I had watched it happen for so many other women, but that somehow now that it was my turn it wasn’t going to work for me. After all, I hadn’t given birth yet—how did I know if I could actually do it or not?  She told me that what I needed was sleep more than anything, and that my body would probably naturally pick up where it had left off when it was better rested and ready to continue.  This midwife had over 25 years of experience, and had been attending homebirths for over 12 years, and when she spoke it was with the wise voice of experience, which I found incredibly reassuring.  She told me a few stories about other homebirths she had attended which had also lasted for days and days, and reminded me that there was no Freidman Curve in a homebirth (i.e there was no ticking clock hanging over us)!  Even though she hadn’t been attending most of the labor so far, speaking with her was just what we needed at a very crucial point in the labor.</p>
<p>So we took a second nap break (around 8 pm on May 15th) with the assistance of lots of hydration and a glass of wine, which went straight to my head given that I had hardly eaten during the labor, and I hadn’t been drinking alcohol for the preceding nine months.  The contractions spaced out a bit and I was able to get some rest.  Everyone took a break, actually; our doula and good friend both headed home, and the midwives gathered up all of the birth equipment and left as well.  I was hoping I would be able to sleep for 4-5 hours, and half expected to wake up around 2 am, which was the time our midwife had randomly suggested the labor might restart.  Instead, while only an hour and half into my nap, I was awakened by shockingly strong contractions, much stronger than anything that had come before.  I moaned my way through a couple of them, and then around 10:30 pm I had three MONSTER contractions in a row which needed more than mere moaning to get through them. I had also begun to shake uncontrollably, and my teeth were chattering.  I couldn&#8217;t stop the shaking and shivering in between the contractions, and I was feeling very panicked because the contractions were suddenly so strong, and so close together.  I couldn&#8217;t even get out of bed before the next one hit me, and I couldn&#8217;t stop shivering and chattering.  I was also hot at the same time, and sweating profusely. It was a very strange combination.  I woke my husband up out of a dead sleep and told him to call our doula and the midwife ASAP, because I was frightened and I didn&#8217;t know what was going on.  He went upstairs and wisely called our doula first (but not the midwife), who hopped in a cab and came back over even though she had only been home for 3 hours.  While we were waiting for her to get to our house, he helped me out of bed and got me upstairs, where I spent my time clinging to the railing by the stairs while moaning and shivering through contraction after contraction.  They were every three minutes at this point, and I was finally (finally!!) in booming, active labor.</p>
<p>Our doula arrived and I stopped feeling so panicky, although the shivering and sweating and teeth chattering continued.  The contractions felt out of control, so much stronger than anything that had come before!  I also vomited for real this time, but I was too deep into the labor to even comment on it, although the thought that this was a good sign did flash through my mind briefly.  My husband and our doula re-filled the birth tub, and I got into it for the second time, which took about an hour.  During that time I stayed on the ball for the most part.  I also got up to go to the bathroom, too, and ended up having a few contractions on the toilet, which felt like water torture!  There was so much more pressure while on the toilet, and I remember clutching the side of the sink with both hands and feeling like I was about to pass out from the pain.  Everything was so stark and bright in the bathroom, the white of the porcelain sink was so white, the pain was so sharp!  Thankfully, the birth tub was full soon after that, and I was able to get into the merciful, soothing warm water.  In the tub I was on my hands and knees during contractions, clinging to the grips on the side of the tub (or my husband) for dear life and moaning my head off, while in between I was able to more or less float on my back and sleep for 3-4 minutes.  The tub didn&#8217;t really make the contractions easier to bear, but it allowed me to completely relax in between contractions to the point that I could sleep, which was so important because I was so exhausted.</p>
<p>I had also become completely non-verbal, barely able to respond to folks and sleeping in between contractions.  The most I could do was say &#8220;gatorade&#8221; every now and then when I was thirsty, and wave my hand in front of my face, which either meant &#8220;fan me&#8221; or &#8220;stop!&#8221; if someone was touching or doing something which was painful or annoying.  My husband proved invaluable in interpreting what these different signals meant.  In retrospect there was such a clear difference between the labor at this point and the labor which had preceded it.  During the whole of Saturday night and Sunday day, even though the contractions had been strong and regular and intense, I was still alert and communicative in between contractions, talking to folks, even cracking jokes now and then.  During the active phase, Sunday night into Monday morning, there was no communication in between contractions. I was dead asleep, and responding to the contractions instinctively, 100% in my monkey brain, as Ina May would say.  My birth team was also pretty much dead asleep.  I remember opening my eyes briefly in between a contraction to see both my doula and husband resting on the edge of the tub with their heads on their arms.  Time had no meaning.  We would sleep in between contractions, mobilize for the contraction itself, and then fall asleep again as soon as the contraction was over.  I remember thinking that the contractions were terrible—just TERRIBLE—but that all I had to do was get through the contraction and then I could return to the delicious sleep state which was thankfully much longer than the contraction itself.  There was still a lot of residual pain after the contractions, though, and my birth team did a great job of reminding me to relax my shoulders, my face, my jaw in between, and return to a restful state.  My best friend arrived again at some point during this time, but honestly, I can&#8217;t even remember when.  I remember looking up and seeing her there, watching me, and I said &#8220;hi&#8221; briefly, then I was back in it again.</p>
<p>The first on-call midwife arrived on the scene around 2 am again Monday morning, lugging all of her birth equipment with her.  I was anxious to be checked, because I felt that surely (surely!) I must be progressing, and I was hoping that I was close to fully dilated.  We also listened to the baby&#8217;s heart again, and there he was, chugging along like usual, strong and steady with a fetal heart rate of 120s-130s. Unfortunately, I was not quite fully, but I was thankfully 8 cm dilated (woo-hoo!!!), and at this point I was too deep into labor to think much about it.  It was all I could do to stay on top of the contractions, which were still every 3-4 minutes, and beyond huge and intense.  At some point after this, the nature of the pain began to change, and I found myself wanting to bear down with it every now and then. Instead of moaning or blowing with the contraction, I would find myself involuntarily holding my breath and grunting.</p>
<p>After another hour of this, I was beginning to feel like I would be in labor forever.  I had forgotten why I was in labor.  I could only think about the contractions, which felt like they had been happening since the dawn of time, and would continue indefinitely.  I think I had even asked for an epidural a few times, or asked to just be put out of my misery, which my birth team wisely ignored (although afterwards they admitted to giving each other &#8220;high-five&#8221; looks with their eyes during these comments).  I was thinking that even a cesarean didn&#8217;t sound like such a bad idea, if it would only take the pain away, although I didn’t say this aloud.  Finally, completely exasperated and feeling like I would never be fully dilated, I reached down and checked myself to see what was going on, and to my immense relief, I could actually feel his head low in my pelvis, just sitting there, on the verge of being born, with only a thin lip of cervix in the way.  It was such an incredible feeling!  During my self exam I said aloud, to the midwife: &#8220;anterior lip, +1, bulging bag&#8221; which made perfect sense to me and her, but which absolutely mystified my husband.  Afterwards, he said he couldn&#8217;t believe that in the middle of labor—in the middle of a contraction—I was able to say something like &#8220;anterior lip&#8221;.  But that&#8217;s what I was feeling, and I was so thankful to be almost finished with the first stage of labor!  I also can’t describe how amazing it was to feel something which I had felt so often in other women during labor actually occurring inside of me—my own body and baby on the verge of delivery!  It was such an amazing feeling that I reached down to feel it again after a few more contractions, and this time there was an internal <em>pop</em> feeling, and my own bag of waters broke.  Suddenly I was sitting in a pool of vernix, but the fluid was clear, which was a very good sign.  The midwife asked if I had popped it on purpose, but I hadn’t!  It had happened on its own, spontaneous rupture of membranes at 3:55 am on May 16<sup>th</sup>.</p>
<p>Once the water broke, I began to feel a lot of rectal pressure (the “grapefruit in anus” feeling which we had joked about during our childbirth class), and my body began to bear down with the contractions, but it was so painful!!  I kept shying away from actually pushing with the contractions, even though my body was trying to, because the pushing felt absolutely excruciating! After a few more attempts at pushing in the tub, someone suggested I get out of the tub and try pushing on dry land (I’m not sure who suggested this…or even if I was the one who suggested it?)  It felt like the tub was too relaxing, though, and it was too easy to run from the pain of pushing, instead of facing it and beginning this very different kind of very hard work.  So with assistance I got out of the tub and lumbered over to the futon we had set up in the living room, complete with plastic sheet and two layers of cheap polyester sheets on top, perfect for getting mucky and bloody.  Our midwife re-checked me one more time at this point, and I still had the small lip of cervix in front of the baby’s head, so with her assistance I pushed through two contractions while she held the lip out of the way, and after two unbearably painful contractions I was finally (finally!) fully dilated.</p>
<p>I was half expecting that pushing would go pretty quickly, because I had it somewhere in the back of my head that I would be a good pusher.  Instead, my birth once again humbled me and taught me a different lesson.  Pushing ended up taking 4 hours, although I wasn’t really aware of the passage of time because it was so intense, and because I felt that he was on the verge of being born with every push, and then the next push, and then the push after that.  I finally couldn’t run away from the pushing, but had to embrace it—the only way out was through.  My body was pushing so powerfully with every contraction, doing this completely on its own.  It was as if I were constipated with the largest poop of my life, and my body was bound and determined to push it out against my will.  So when the contraction started, I curled up on my side while my midwife or doula held one leg, and then I would squeeze my stomach muscles and strain with the contraction, trying to move the grapefruit down little by little.  At first I felt like I was making no progress at all, but everyone began to say very encouraging things, and I could tell from their tone of voice that they felt I was doing a good job, even though I felt like he was stuck and going nowhere.  And we pushed. And pushed. And pushed.  When the contraction came, I grabbed whatever was closest to me in a fearsome grip and squeezed for dear life—usually this was my husband’s hand, or shoulder, or shirt, or leg, or hip.  He was curled up on the futon at my head, and I kept flopping back into his lap in between the contractions, still dead asleep in between the pushing.  It’s hard to actually remember this part, because my eyes were closed almost the entire time, and I was so internally focused on my body.  I do remember opening my eyes at some point and marveling that it had gotten light out—I couldn’t believe so much time had passed!  To me it felt like it was still only 2 or 3 in the morning, in the deep dark of the night.</p>
<p>I do remember reaching down at one point and feeling his head beginning to present—he felt so huge and bulging in my rectum, but all I could feel was a tiny quarter-sized bit of head between my legs, and I remember shrieking: “that’s it???”  Compared to how everyone had been encouraging me, and compared to how low and full he felt, I thought he was nearly out of me.  But everyone continued to encourage me, and my body kept giving me no choice, so I kept pushing.  And pushing. And pushing.  Our second midwife had come back over again at some point (probably once I was fully and pushing, although I don’t remember when she came), and she kept fanning me and making sure I had sips of Gatorade in between pushes.  She really wanted to be there for the delivery, but there was another woman in labor at the same time, and her labor was going very quickly, so unfortunately, even though our second midwife kept trying to put it off, she had to leave to attend the other birth, and I ended up delivering with the first on-call midwife, which actually felt very appropriate since she had been there through the bulk of the labor with us.</p>
<p>I tried pushing in a few other positions (hands and knees, kneeling), but the side-lying position seemed to be working the best, so we stuck with that for the majority of the time.  Honestly, I’m not sure where I found the strength to do it—it was more like I was on a runaway train and there was no way to get off, so I had to just keep going, and pushing with every contraction because I had no choice.  Finally, he began to crown, and everyone kept reassuring me that he was finally under the pubic bone and wasn’t slipping back into my pelvis in between pushes, and that they could see more and more of his head.  They offered me a mirror so that I could actually see him coming out with each push, but I didn’t want to look.  It was easier just to feel, and amazingly, when I reached down I could feel his little head just sitting there between my legs—with so much downy soft hair on his head!  Great, I thought, it will be soon! And I let myself begin to believe, <em>truly</em> believe, that I was going to give birth vaginally in my home, soon.  But he continued to crown, and crown, and crown, and even though I was pushing incredibly strong with every contraction, I couldn’t seem to actually get him out.</p>
<p>My midwife tried to apply some warm compresses to my perineum, which felt okay, although sometimes too hot.  She also tried to do some perineal massage, but this was way too painful to tolerate, so I eventually snapped at her to keep her hands off.  I could also, incredibly, feel him squirming his little head around inside of me, trying to find the perfect fit through my pelvis.  I thought it was the midwife touching me again, and I told her again not to touch me, but she assured me it was the baby, she was keeping her hands off.  It got to the point that I couldn’t even tell when I was contracting anymore, because everything had become so painful.  The midwives were listening to the baby’s heart every other push at this point, and even having the Doppler pressing against my skin right about the pubic bone was excruciating.  As soon as I heard his heart, I kept trying to get them to take the Doppler away as quickly as possible, although they wanted to listen for longer than just a second.  But I could feel the baby moving inside of me, and I knew that everything was fine with him—there was no way I could communicate this to the birth team, so generally it amounted to them listening to his heart while I moaned and waved my hand and tried to get them to take the Doppler away.  I began to feel the “ring of fire”, which truly was a ring of fire, so painful that every time I got to that point, it was very hard to push past it.  And since I could hardly tell when I was contracting anymore, my husband began to count down for me, and I would push with him when he told me to push.  It felt as if I were turning my insides out.  Our midwife finally suggested that I get into a kneeling position for the last few pushes, and with some effort I was able to turn myself over with a baby half sticking out of me, and I knelt on my knees and leaned on against my husband’s chest for the last few pushes.</p>
<p>Suddenly the midwife told to my husband to come look, quick, and I could finally (finally!) feel the baby slipping out of me, through the ring of fire.  It happened so quickly, after such a long push, that it was hard to believe it was finally over.  The midwife passed the baby up between my legs towards me, and there he was: pink and wet and screaming, waving his little arms and legs, looking completely outraged!  I had thought I would cry with joy when I first saw him, but honestly, my first thought was: oh thank the gods he’s out!!!!!</p>
<p>They put the baby on my chest and I eased myself back into a sitting position, and we all just marveled over how amazing and beautiful our son was.  Slowly, slowly it began to sink in that the labor was over, and there was a baby in my arms!</p>
<p>Within a few minutes (seemed that way at least, since time had stopped), the midwife said the placenta was just sitting there, and that I needed to give a few pushes.  I was so exhausted, and pushing felt so painful that I’m not even sure I was any help at all, but I did hold my breath and grunt a few times, and the placenta slipped out between my legs, and it was finally over!  I couldn&#8217;t care less about the placenta, though—I was too busy marveling over our baby.  But suddenly the midwife, who had been inspecting the placenta, gasped and told me to take a look at it.  Instead of a normal cord insertion, where the three blood vessels of the cord insert into the body of the placenta directly, our baby had something called a velamentous cord insertion, which occurs when the blood vessels insert into the membranes instead of the placenta directly, and aren’t protected by the wharton’s jelly.  It happens in about 1% of all pregnancies, so it’s pretty rare, and also very fragile and delicate, and isn&#8217;t seen on sonogram (usually).  If anything had happened to one of those tiny vessels during the delivery, it could have been catastrophic.  I had actually encountered a similar cord insertion several years ago when I was working as a L&amp;D nurse, and we actually lost that baby—during the pushing phase the baby had descended very rapidly, and had torn one of the vessels on the way down, and we even though we had rushed the mother and baby back to the OR when the fetal heart rate dropped and didn’t recover, we hadn’t been fast enough.</p>
<p>So in the end, I feel like I had the perfect birth—the exact birth that my baby and I had needed.  Suddenly, in light of my placenta, my slow, protracted labor made a lot more sense, as did the four hours of pushing, where he descended at a snail’s pace, slow and steady.  Every time we had listened to his heart, he had sounded strong and healthy, without a single deceleration or indication that anything was wrong.  I also think that my labor had to wear me down to the point that I was so exhausted I couldn’t think any more.  During the whole of Saturday and most of Sunday, I had still been in my brain far too much, still been thinking about everything too much, still too much of a midwife and not enough of a laboring woman.  It wasn’t until I was utterly exhausted, 41 hours into labor, that my mind finally turned off, and my body could take over.  Once that happened, once my mind was finally out of the way and my monkey brain was running the show, then suddenly the labor progressed pretty quickly.  41 hours of latent phase, 11 hours of active phase, 4 hours of pushing, and one beautiful, perfect son (and an intact perineum!!).  And I&#8217;m so grateful that I was allowed to labor at home, with a birth team that totally, 100% believed in me and the power of my body!  I am fairly certain that if I had been in a hospital, the clock would have started ticking at some point, and steps would have been taken to move things along&#8211;an epidural and pitocin, or maybe even a cesarean for &#8220;failure to progress.&#8221;  Probably at the point on Sunday when I was still only 4-5 cm dilated after over 36 hours of labor.  In general, I feel like most hospitals, and most providers aren&#8217;t as patient as mine had been, or so certain in their belief that labor is a normal, healthy process, and that long, marathon labors can still be normal too.  And then who knows what would have happened to our baby if we had been forcing things to move more quickly&#8211;if the pitocin had brought him down too quickly, or distressed him in some other way, especially given his fragile cord insertion.  It&#8217;s all in the realm of what might have been, thankfully.  What actually happened was just what needed to happen, and my beautiful son was born at home into the loving arms of his family.</p>
<p>Because of its rarity, and because this is a midwife&#8217;s blog, I am posting a picture of the placenta here, behind the &#8220;More&#8221; link.  WARNING: placenta alert! Not for the squeamish! But check out the velamentous cord insertion: pretty fascinating (from an academic point of view):</p>
<p><span id="more-376"></span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.bellytales.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/P10007311.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-large wp-image-389" title="Placenta with velamentous cord insertion" src="http://www.bellytales.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/P10007311-1024x768.jpg" alt="" width="1024" height="768" /></a></p>
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		<title>The Waiting is the Hardest Part</title>
		<link>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/05/13/the-waiting-is-the-hardest-part/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/05/13/the-waiting-is-the-hardest-part/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 13 May 2011 19:11:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>The Midwife</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Homebirth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pregnancy]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bellytales.com/?p=368</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I feel like I need to be singing the Tom Petty tune right now&#8230; 39 weeks pregnant now, everything is ready.  Our fridge is full of food and drinks (gatorade, coconut water) for the birth. The birth tub has been inflated and set up close to the bathroom, ready to be filled. I&#8217;ve prepped postpartum [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I feel like I need to be singing the Tom Petty tune right now&#8230;</p>
<p>39 weeks pregnant now, everything is ready.  Our fridge is full of food and drinks (gatorade, coconut water) for the birth. The birth tub has been inflated and set up close to the bathroom, ready to be filled. I&#8217;ve prepped postpartum pads with witch-hazel and stashed them in the freezer so they&#8217;ll be nice and icy-cold for sore postpartum perineums.  The diaper changing area and co-sleeper are set up and waiting. The birth kit is in the corner, with its attendant sheets/ towels/ washcloths/ plastic drapes/ shower curtains etc.  We have a birth ball.  And a rocking chair.  A moby, a baby bjorn, newborn clothes washed and folded and tucked away in dresser drawers.  We have everything except actual contractions&#8230;</p>
<p>It&#8217;s the strangest thing, this state of limbo.  I stopped working last week, at 38 weeks, which was a relief because work was becoming very difficult.  Two weeks ago, at 37 weeks, I attended a birth with a four-hour push at the end of it, and although I never doubted that the woman would be able to push her baby out, I did doubt if I would have the strength to get through it, heavily-pregnant and tired as I was. In the end, another midwife from our practice came in and helped assist during the last hour or so of the pushing, because my energy was really flagging.  And at some point, as a pregnant woman, you begin to want to focus all of your energy inward, on yourself and your baby, and it feels very hard to take that energy and give it to other women in labor.  Not that I&#8217;m being selfish about my energy, but I have reached the point where my own pregnancy is becoming paramount, and taking up more space in my head and heart than my midwife-self.   At which point I&#8217;m not much of a service to other women in labor anymore.  The time has come to be just a pregnant woman now.</p>
<p>And these last few days which have been given to me are wonderful. Days when I can still lounge around, stop by the nail salon and get a pedicure just because I have the time and the inclination.  Nights where I can sleep as long as I like (broken only by getting up to pee 3-4x/night).  Nights which I can spend with my husband, going out for dinner or watching movies together, cherishing these last few moments when it&#8217;s just the two of us, before it becomes the three of us.</p>
<p>I have told myself throughout my pregnancy that I will carry my baby to term.  It&#8217;s been a mantra of sorts, because I know many nurses and midwives who&#8217;ve had issues with preterm contractions and preterm births, predicaments which are certainly not helped along by their jobs.  While at work I was always very careful to hydrate myself constantly, and to sit whenever possible, and to try to leave the heavy-lifting to others during births.  But maybe so much of my mental focus was spent telling my body to keep the baby in, that now that I am finally full term, my body is having a hard time letting the baby go.  Or maybe I am just hyper-analyzing this.  First babies tend to come late, past the due date, and this is a first baby.</p>
<p>I am trying to not be too impatient, just because I am so eager to finally meet this little one!  I trust my body, and I trust the timing of my body and baby.  And really, my baby will come at the right time, when he is ready.  In the meantime&#8230;I can catch up on my blogging. <img src='http://www.bellytales.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_wink.gif' alt=';-)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
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		<title>What happens when midwives get pregnant?</title>
		<link>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/04/07/what-happens-when-midwives-get-pregnant/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/04/07/what-happens-when-midwives-get-pregnant/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 08 Apr 2011 02:40:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>The Midwife</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Homebirth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Labor and Birth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vaginal Birth]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bellytales.com/?p=365</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#60;insert Monty Python voice&#62; And now for something completely different&#8230; I&#8217;ve been keeping this news to myself for quite some time here.  I guess I&#8217;m finally ready to blog about it (not that anyone is currently reading this anyway, so it&#8217;s more or less like writing in my journal), but guess what??  I&#8217;m pregnant!  And [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&lt;insert Monty Python voice&gt; And now for something completely different&#8230;</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve been keeping this news to myself for quite some time here.  I guess I&#8217;m finally ready to blog about it (not that anyone is currently reading this anyway, so it&#8217;s more or less like writing in my journal), but guess what??  I&#8217;m pregnant!  And not just a little bit pregnant, I am actually quite pregnant: 34 weeks today, to be precise, just three weeks away from full term.</p>
<p>We&#8217;re planning a homebirth with two lovely homebirth midwives in attendance  who have been caring for me since I was 10 weeks pregnant.  There will be a doula as well (one of my good friends who is also a Labor &amp; Delivery nurse, whom I met while working as an L&amp;D nurse back in 2003), and of course my husband, and my best friend; a small but incredibly supportive birth team.  And a birth tub, which we&#8217;re renting (and which we still need to pick up).  The list of things I need to prepare for the birth is still quite long, and a bit overwhelming, even.  At this point, we still don&#8217;t even have a name for the child yet (who is a boy, btw; even if I had wanted a surprise, I knew exactly what I was looking at during the sonogram, and could see the tiny little penis quite clearly).  We don&#8217;t have a pediatrician picked out, either.  The birth kit is in the mail but not yet arrived. And don&#8217;t even get me started on the list of baby stuff which we still need to acquire before the birth, diapers being priority number one. There is a lot to get done in the next few weeks.</p>
<p>From an emotional standpoint, though, I feel like I&#8217;ve been taking it all pretty well in stride.  I&#8217;ve had (thankfully) a very healthy and straightforward pregnancy so far.  I&#8217;ve felt good for the majority of the pregnancy, aside from some nausea and fatigue in the first trimester; all of my blood tests have been normal, the sonogram looked good, everything is healthy and low-risk at this point.  He&#8217;s a very active little guy, he squirms and moves nearly constantly, he likes to dance while I&#8217;m listening to music, and always kicks his happy appreciation of all of the good food I&#8217;ve been eating during the pregnancy.  Current pregnancy complaints amount to a sore back (totally expected, in the third trimester), and having to get up and pee about 3-4 times a night.  I&#8217;ve been working my usual schedule, and if all continues to go well, my intention is to work up until 38 weeks, or until I give birth, whichever comes first.</p>
<p>When I was a younger woman, still in midwifery school, I used to worry about my own birth.  I used to worry that I would know too much, that I wouldn&#8217;t be able to turn my brain off and surrender myself to the forces of labor when the time came, that I would be the classic example of the woman who&#8217;s trying to give birth with her brain rather than her body, and whose brain is getting in the way of the labor.  I worried that something bad would happen; there is a superstition among healthcare workers that pregnant nurses/ midwives/ doctors etc. tend to have a much higher rate of rare and frightening emergencies during their labors and births which somehow necessitate every intervention under the sun, or result in tragic and terrible outcomes.  I have heard this superstition passed around before&#8212;that bad things always happen to healthcare workers&#8212;and when I was younger I used to worry about it too.  And I have worried in the past that I will somehow by disappointed by my birth experience&#8212;that because I have so much knowledge, and such a love of birth, and so much expectation going into it, that inevitably there is no way my own birth could live up to such high standards.  The flip side of this is the fear that I am never going to be cared for as well or as completely as I care for other women; that the care I receive will fall short of my own lofty standards and expectations, and that I will never be given as much as I have given to other women during their births.</p>
<p>Like I said, these are old worries.  I stumbled across them while I was paging through an old journal of mine a few weeks ago, written down in 2005 while I was taking a Birthing From Within mentor training course in order to be able to teach Birthing From Within childbirth classes.  Strangely enough, these worries now seem foreign to me.  At least, they&#8217;re not the things I&#8217;ve actually been worrying about during my pregnancy.  I feel like the birth will be very difficult&#8212;the hardest thing I&#8217;ve ever done in my life&#8212;but that it&#8217;s totally do-able, and that I will absolutely get through it, however hard or long it is.  I&#8217;m not really hung up on interventions, or trying to ensure that they don&#8217;t occur.  I feel like I&#8217;ll have them if I need them, but if all goes smoothly, then hopefully it will be a straightforward, uneventful homebirth. I don&#8217;t feel like I&#8217;m dead-set on a homebirth no matter what; if there are recurrent decels, or thick meconium, any indication of severe distress, or any other pressing reason, we&#8217;ll go to a hospital.  If I need a cesarean in the end, at least I know that I will be one of the women who really, truly does need a cesarean, rather than getting pressured into it by an impatient or uncaring provider.  If I&#8217;m having an exhausting 48+ hour labor with excruciating back labor and things are going really slowly, I&#8217;m not opposed to an epidural, either, and some rest.  Thankfully my midwife has hospital admitting privileges if we need them, and there is a hospital very close to us for emergencies.  I don&#8217;t think we&#8217;ll end up in a hospital, but I&#8217;m ready to weather whatever my birth throws at me, and I&#8217;m trying to cultivate a flexible roll-with-the-punches attitude.  But I think of all the births I have attended (326 now, and counting), each unique in its own way and yet also so similar, and I think of all the women who I have been with who get to a point where they truly believe that they can&#8217;t go on, that they can&#8217;t do it, that their baby will never come, that they&#8217;ll never give birth etc. etc&#8230;and then I watch them climb that mountain and get over it and do the impossible thing they didn&#8217;t think they were capable of, and give birth&#8212;simply, normally, vaginally, uneventfully.  And honestly, it gives me tremendous faith in the process.  I&#8217;m sure I too will get to the point where I am convinced I won&#8217;t be able to do it&#8230;and then I will.  I have faith that I will, and I feel like my faith is what will get me through it (and my smart and attentive care providers will make sure that we&#8217;re not taking any unnecessary risks, should we fall off the curve of normal, and I trust them, and their judgement, implicitly).</p>
<p>So no, I haven&#8217;t been worrying much about the birth.  I&#8217;ve been worrying more about motherhood, about the huge and tremendous responsibility which is about to descend on me.  I&#8217;ve been worrying that I won&#8217;t be a good mother, or a good enough mother, that the task will be too much for me, that my child will hate or resent me, that I&#8217;ll somehow mess my poor child up in terrible, Freudian, unfathomable ways.  And of course I&#8217;ve been worrying over the health of my baby.  I pray that he&#8217;ll be healthy, and neurologically intact, and strong.  Every pregnant woman does, I&#8217;m certain.</p>
<p>But I took the time to write down a gazillion birth affirmations last night, and I&#8217;ve been saying them to myself regularly today.  Simple things, but I also believe in the power of positive thought:</p>
<blockquote>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>I am a strong and powerful woman. I believe in myself. I trust my body.  My baby is strong and healthy. My cervix knows what to do.  I have an open heart.  I am surrounded by loving, nurturing support.  I trust my inner wisdom.  Birth will come easily to me. I have everything I need. I welcome my coming labor as the perfect one for me and my baby.  I deserve and receive all the love and support I need. I deserve a gentle, natural birth. I claim my birthright for a wonderful birth.  I will be a wonderful mother.</em></p>
</blockquote>
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		<title>CPM bill introduced in Congress</title>
		<link>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/03/24/cpm-bill-introduced-in-congress/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bellytales.com/2011/03/24/cpm-bill-introduced-in-congress/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 25 Mar 2011 02:29:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>The Midwife</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Homebirth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Midwifery]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bellytales.com/?p=364</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I have already written extensively on the differences between CNMs/ CMs and CPMs, about how there is a national divide between these qualifications which may prove very hard to bridge, and about how the lack of a unified standard of midwifery in the US continues to divide and destabilize our profession.  Part of the problem [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I have already <a href="http://www.bellytales.com/2007/10/02/why-the-acnm-needs-more-cms/">written extensively on the differences between CNMs/ CMs and CPMs</a>, about how there is a national divide between these qualifications which may prove very hard to bridge, and about how the lack of a unified standard of midwifery in the US continues to divide and destabilize our profession.  Part of the problem is that laws vary so greatly between state to state.  In some states, Certified Professional Midwives (CPMs) are legal, in other states they are not  recognized at all and must practice illegally and under the radar, even though they have studied and and been credentialed by a national certification board (NARM, the North American Registry of Midwives). It&#8217;s rather infuriating, given that the only thing stopping them from legal recognition and practice are the state to state differences in law. I&#8217;m not really going to go through the differences between CPMs/ CNMs/ CMs (read the link above), but instead focus on the fact that some <a href="http://freeourmidwives.org/cpm-bill-introduced-a-milestone-for-mothers-and-midwives/">very exciting legislation has recently been introduced by Congresswoman Chellie Pingree</a> in an attempt to gain federal recognition of CPMs (thus eliminating the state-by-state discrepancies) as well as allowing them to be medicaid providers.  The rational behind this is that once Medicaid recognizes a  specific type of clinician as a medicaid provider, all of the other insurance companies usually follow Medicaid&#8217;s lead.  You can read the full text of the the proposed legislation here: <a href="http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/thomas">H.R. 1054.</a> The driving force behind this legislation is the <a href="http://mamacampaign.squarespace.com/">MAMA campaign</a>, spearheaded by the Midwives Alliance of North America (MANA) and Citizens for Midwifery (CfM).</p>
<p>In New York State, CNMs/ CMs practice legally but CPMs do not.  I personally know of several friends who have had lovely, safe, wonderful births attended by CPMs in this state, but unfortunately these midwives did so illegally, with no back-up and no recourse if something went wrong.  Being charged with practicing medicine without a license is very serious, and especially tragic given that CPMs do have certifications, but are unable to obtain licences in various states depending on state legislation.   How wonderful it would be if CPMs were federally recognized the same way CNMs are (although the bitter politician in me wonders if the ACNM is going to welcome this legislation with open arms).  In any case, check out the MAMA campaign, and let&#8217;s keep our fingers crossed!</p>
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